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author | Fred Drake <fdrake@acm.org> | 2003-07-16 03:26:31 (GMT) |
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committer | Fred Drake <fdrake@acm.org> | 2003-07-16 03:26:31 (GMT) |
commit | 3605ae5966afdd58ebe95e26b457cf4b72fd86f2 (patch) | |
tree | a57cb931e9af001fe67167206e806c38e945d5c1 /Doc | |
parent | 7769bb922483ef8ef461fcca8142b97fe50a3f11 (diff) | |
download | cpython-3605ae5966afdd58ebe95e26b457cf4b72fd86f2.zip cpython-3605ae5966afdd58ebe95e26b457cf4b72fd86f2.tar.gz cpython-3605ae5966afdd58ebe95e26b457cf4b72fd86f2.tar.bz2 |
In the description of enumerate(), the indexing operators should not
be included in the \var. This produced weird results in general, but
broke the GNU info conversion.
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc')
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/whatsnew/whatsnew23.tex | 4 |
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/whatsnew/whatsnew23.tex b/Doc/whatsnew/whatsnew23.tex index 8b3fc61..fcaa563 100644 --- a/Doc/whatsnew/whatsnew23.tex +++ b/Doc/whatsnew/whatsnew23.tex @@ -383,8 +383,8 @@ and implemented by Jack Jansen.} A new built-in function, \function{enumerate()}, will make certain loops a bit clearer. \code{enumerate(thing)}, where \var{thing} is either an iterator or a sequence, returns a iterator -that will return \code{(0, \var{thing[0]})}, \code{(1, -\var{thing[1]})}, \code{(2, \var{thing[2]})}, and so forth. +that will return \code{(0, \var{thing}[0])}, \code{(1, +\var{thing}[1])}, \code{(2, \var{thing}[2])}, and so forth. Fairly often you'll see code to change every element of a list that looks like this: |